By Andrew Pillow If Hillary Clinton has her way, in-state tuition may be a thing of the past. Clinton revealed her tuition plan and it includes a plan to make tuition free for families that make up to $125,000 annually. This is being seen by many as a gesture to win over Bernie Sanders’ supporters. The…

Aggregated By Andrew Pillow Most in U.S. Oppose Colleges Considering Race in Admissions (via: Gallup) Why Do So Many Graduate Students Quit? (via: The Atlantic) No grades, no timetable: Berlin school turns teaching upside down (via: The Guardian)

By Andrew Pillow Oakland City University employs exclusively white males in their teaching training program. This key fact could cost them renewal of their accreditation The State Board of Education didn’t renew accreditation of the teacher training program when they met on Wednesday. The board did vote to renew the accreditation on the condition…

By Andrew Pillow Much has been made of the lack of education funding. Usually proponents of increased school funding are told that there is not enough money. This latest report is going to make that a little bit harder to believe. The new report says that basically when calculated by population, many states are spending…

By Andrew Pillow Presumptive Democratic nominee, Hillary Clinton, addressed the National Education Association on Tuesday. Clinton told the NEA that they would have an ally in the white house. The speech was very pro-union, and essentially included a promise to defend collective bargaining rights. It is worth noting that Clinton was booed for a bit….

By Andrew Pillow Federal discipline data released recently reveals what many in the Ed-Reform circles of Indiana have known for a while. Indiana schools suspend lots of students. While 75,000 sounds like a lot, according to the data analysis of WFYI, it is actually even higher than most other states. Indiana schools resort to suspensions…

Aggregated By Andrew Pillow Parents Who Bully the School (National Association of Independent Schools) How Trump Is Already Shaping Education Policy (The Atlantic) The paradox of higher education in MENA (Brookings)